Catalogue of the Extensive and Valuable Library of His Royal Highness the Duke of York, Deceased;
Author: Sotheby's (Firm)
Publisher:
Published: 1827
Total Pages: 214
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Author: Sotheby's (Firm)
Publisher:
Published: 1827
Total Pages: 214
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DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Catalogues
Publisher:
Published: 1839
Total Pages: 432
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Published: 1835
Total Pages: 366
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DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Sotheby & Co. (London, England)
Publisher:
Published: 1827
Total Pages: 228
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Published: 1835
Total Pages: 364
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Published: 1835
Total Pages: 376
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Published: 1905
Total Pages: 1222
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DOWNLOAD EBOOKVols. for 1871-76, 1913-14 include an extra number, The Christmas bookseller, separately paged and not included in the consecutive numbering of the regular series.
Author: Claire Connolly
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2020-03-12
Total Pages: 795
ISBN-13: 110863785X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe years between 1780 and 1830 are vital decades in the history of Irish writing in English. This book charts the confluence of Enlightenment, antiquarian, and romantic energies within Irish literary culture and shows how different writers and genres absorbed, dispersed and remade those interests during five decades of political change. During those same years, literature made its own history. By the 1840s, Irish writing formed a recognizable body of work, which later generations would draw on, quote, anthologize and dispute. Questions raised by novels, poems and plays of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries - the politics of language and voice; the relationship between literature and locality; the possibility of literature as a profession - resonated for many Irish writers over the centuries that followed and continue to matter today. This comprehensive volume will be a key reference for scholars and students of Irish literature and romantic literary studies.
Author: Declan Kiberd
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Published: 2001
Total Pages: 726
ISBN-13: 9780674005051
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA celebration of the tenacious life of the enduring Irish classics, this book by one of Irish writing's most eloquent readers offers a brilliant and accessible survey of the greatest works since 1600 in Gaelic and English, which together have shaped one of the world's most original literary cultures. In the course of his discussion of the great seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Gaelic poems of dispossession, and of later work in that language that refuses to die, Declan Kiberd provides vivid and idiomatic translations that bring the Irish texts alive for the English-speaking reader. Extending from the Irish poets who confronted modernity as a cataclysm, and who responded by using traditional forms in novel and radical ways, to the great modern practitioners of such paradoxically conservative and revolutionary writing, Kiberd's work embraces three sorts of Irish classics: those of awesome beauty and internal rigor, such as works by the Gaelic bards, Yeats, Synge, Beckett, and Joyce; those that generate a myth so powerful as to obscure the individual writer and unleash an almost superhuman force, such as the Cuchulain story, the lament for Art O'Laoghaire, and even Dracula; and those whose power exerts a palpable influence on the course of human action, such as Swift's Drapier's Letters, the speeches of Edmund Burke, or the autobiography of Wolfe Tone. The book closes with a moving and daring coda on the Anglo-Irish agreement, claiming that the seeds of such a settlement were sown in the works of Irish literature. A delight to read throughout, Irish Classics is a fitting tribute to the works it reads so well and inspires us to read, and read again.